HEINRICH HEINE
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... Geldern, he served as an officer in the Austrian army, and that he died as the proprietor of the Vienna ]4emde7ezihatt. Of Heinrich Heine himself I have only one personal recollection. It was a few years before his death when I was. taken to see him at Paris ...
... THIE YOUTHFUL TROUBLES OF HEINRICH HEINE. I Ix honour of a Liverpool correspondent of Heinrich Heine's father, a Mr. Harry, who knew the best velveteen factories, the boy's name was anglicized, and henceforth the Hinz, Heinz, or Heinzchen was known as ...
... MORE REMINISCENCES OF HEINRICH HEINE. TTHE Heine memoirs grow in interest as they proceed. That part which is published in the latest number of the Gar/enletubce seems to have been written at a time when the poet's sufferings were less acute. All the ...
... THE FIRST LOVE OF HEINRICH HEINE. THE story of Sefchen, as Josepha, the first girl he ever loved, was generally called, has been told before now in the Reminiscences of. Heinrich Heine (Berlin, rS68), but only the bare facts are there given, whereas ...
... sketch of that Socialist leader was published here, in which Heinrich Heine attri buted to him the same amount of ambition and much the same character as did Prince Bismarck. Heinrich Heine found Lassalle gifted with a wonderful amount of volubility, ...
... presence of this soldier of Wagramr whose bones elicit the admiration of the natives and the joy of Europeans. After all, Heinrich Heine has declared that there is more fun in a French corpse than in the merriest German alive; so it is just possible that ...
... presence of this soldier of Wagram, whose bones elicit the admiration of the natives and the joy of Europeans.) After all, Heinrich Heine has declared that there is more fun in a French corpse than in the merriest German alive; so it is just possible that ...
... season, accompanied by Lady Isabel Stanley. A German correspondent writes :-It was at I)isseldorf (not Darmstadt), where Heinrich Heine was born, that the lown Council retised to allow a monument to be set up in his memory. Dttsseldorf is represented in ...
... his fool's bells ring to banish sad thoughts. The father, whose remark on the characteristics of his ancestor earned for Heinrich Heine his first whipping, wore a solemn look. Every movement was slow and measured, and every feature of his face seemed to ...